Soft and Chewy Molasses Cookies (2024)

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This molasses cookie recipe is the perfect holiday treat. Dark molasses with butter, warm spices, and a signature crackly top stay true to the recipe from the 1800s, but with a modern twist. Add a tiny bit of coffee to deepen the rich flavors of the spices. A must-make cookie every fall and winter!Soft and Chewy Molasses Cookies (1)

This dough comes together quickly, which is great because you can use your mixer or just a bowl and spoon, but it does take a little time to chill. The chill is what keeps this cookie from spreading too much and keeps the cookie soft. The dough can stay in the fridge or freezer for a few weeks, which I love to prep ahead for the holiday season. It seems like there is always a need for cookies last minute.

Table of contents

  • Soft and Chewy Molasses Cookie Ingredients
  • How to Make Molasses Cookies
  • FAQ
  • Related Recipes

Soft and Chewy Molasses Cookie IngredientsSoft and Chewy Molasses Cookies (2)

Molasses is the key ingredient for a molasses cookie. Molasses is a syrup that is the product resulting from refining sugarcane into sugar. There are a few different types of molasses, dark, light, sulphered, unsulphered and black strap. The kind of molasses you use matters. Sulphered and black strap molasses are very bitter and more often used in savory recipes. I recommend dark or light unsulphered molasses for baking. It is also easiest to find in a grocery store. A little goes a long way, so I am able to keep a jar of molasses for quite a while in my refrigerator.Soft and Chewy Molasses Cookies (3)

Brown Sugar is granulated sugar with molasses added to it. It gives this recipe just that much more deep flavor and chewy texture. You can use light or dark brown sugar, both work well in this recipe. Dark brown sugar has more molasses in it, giving it a darker color. We use white granulated sugar for the exterior to give the cookie a sparkle and a crackly top.

Butter... I can’t think of a more delicious ingredient in cookies. The flavor and fat are key to the performance of the cookie as well as the mouthfeel.

Instant coffee is totally optional, I chose to include it because I really wanted to deepen the warm flavors of this cookie. Coffee can help highlight the flavors of the molasses as well as the spices. I chose instant granules because I didn’t want to add any extra moisture to the dough.

How to Make Molasses Cookies

  1. Combine the flour, baking soda, cinnamon, ginger, cloves, salt, and instant coffee in a large bowl with a whisk, then set it aside.Soft and Chewy Molasses Cookies (4)
  2. Add the brown sugar and softened butter to a large bowl or the bowl of your stand mixer with the paddle attachment and cream until light and fluffy, about 1 to 2 minutes.Soft and Chewy Molasses Cookies (5)Soft and Chewy Molasses Cookies (6)
  3. Stop the mixer when adding the molasses to avoid the thick syrup from splattering on the sides of the bowl. Mix until the molasses is incorporated, then scrape the bottom of the bowl for the stubborn butter.Soft and Chewy Molasses Cookies (7)
  4. Mix in the egg until it's fully incorporated. Soft and Chewy Molasses Cookies (8)
  5. Add the dry ingredients and mix until the flour is evenly incorporated. You can briefly mix on low speed in your mixer, or combine by hand with a spatula or wooden spoon.Soft and Chewy Molasses Cookies (9)
  6. Cover the dough with plastic wrap and refrigerate it for 3 hours or overnight. Chilling the dough allows the flour to fully hydrate and stops them from spreading.Soft and Chewy Molasses Cookies (10)
  7. Preheat the oven to 350°F. Prepare a cookie sheet with parchment paper.
  8. Scoop 1.5-ounce balls of dough (about 2 Tablespoons), roll them in the extra granulated sugar, and place them on the cookie sheet, at least 2 inches apart. Gently press the top of the cookie slightly, to keep the cookie from rolling around.Soft and Chewy Molasses Cookies (11)Soft and Chewy Molasses Cookies (12)
  9. Bake the cookies for 12-15 minutes until the edges are slightly browning and the center is puffed and no longer wet looking. The center might “glisten” a bit, but if the cookie appears set, it is doneSoft and Chewy Molasses Cookies (13)
  10. Cool the cookies for 5 minutes before transferring them to a cooling rack. They are very soft due to the sugar so they need a few minutes to set up before being moved.Soft and Chewy Molasses Cookies (14)
  11. Keep the cookies in an airtight container at room temperature. You can wrap and freeze the cookies for 2 weeks, or freeze the unbaked cookie dough for up to 3 months. Pro-tip: Pre-roll the cookie dough balls and freeze them, making it even quicker to bake them off fresh. Just roll them in the granulated sugar and pop them in the oven.Soft and Chewy Molasses Cookies (15)

FAQ

What's the best molasses for cookies?

The flavor of this cookie is distinct because of the star ingredient. I recommend unsulfured molasses. It will be the easiest to find at the grocery store. Sulphered and blackstrap molasses are more bitter and sharper in flavor, so I do not recommend using those types in baking.

Why are my molasses cookies flat?

If the dough is not chilled for long enough it will spread in the oven and once it has spread there is not enough structure in the flour to keep it puffed. Molasses is thick and gooey, and it will want to stay in that state if allowed.
Make sure your butter isn’t too soft or warm, even though you will chill it, the consistency of the butter can affect the outcome. To ensure your cookies turn out right, use a scale to measure your ingredients.

Why didn’t my cookies crack?

If the cookies didn’t get a good enough layer of sugar before going in the oven, that changes how the exterior bakes. It can be fun to experiment too, with different types of sugar or coating, like cinnamon sugar, powdered sugar or maybe some cocoa powder.

What if I don’t have time to chill my dough?

The dough is very soft with a high ratio of butter and sugar, also molasses, which is an invert sugar (syrup) and that is what makes chewy cookies. So for the best results chilling the dough gives the flour time to hydrate, the butter to firm, and the syrup time to thicken. Once the cold cookie dough goes into the oven. It will warm and bake slower than warm dough, allowing the baking soda to do its job of puffing up the cookie and forming its shape before it melts out flat. That being said, if you are looking for a flat cookie, go ahead and bake the dough at room temperature. It will remain pretty chewy because of the molasses.

Is molasses the same as gingerbread?

While gingerbread cookies and molasses cookies both are yummy holiday cookies with spices and molasses, they are not the same. Molasses cookies have cloves for a deep, rich flavor and are soft and chewy compared to snappy and crispy gingerbread.

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Recipe

Soft and Chewy Molasses Cookies (16)

Molasses Cookie Recipe

These wonderfully soft and chewy molasses cookies have a deep rich butter and molasses flavor with warm spices. It’s impossible to not fall in love with one of my favorite cookies!

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Prep Time: 20 minutes minutes

Cook Time: 12 minutes minutes

Chilling Time: 3 hours hours

Total Time: 3 hours hours 32 minutes minutes

Course: Dessert

Cuisine: American

Servings: 24 cookies

Calories: 155kcal

Author: Elizabeth Marek

Equipment

  • 2 sheet pans lined with parchment

Ingredients

  • 2 ½ cups all purpose flour
  • 2 teaspoons baking soda
  • 1 teaspoon cinnamon
  • 1 teaspoon ground ginger
  • teaspoon ground cloves
  • ½ teaspoon instant coffee granules optional
  • ½ teaspoon salt
  • ¾ cup unsalted butter softened but not melted
  • 1 cup brown sugar dark or light
  • 1 large egg
  • ¼ cup molasses unsulphered
  • ¼ cup granulated sugar for coating

US Customary - Metric

Instructions

  • Combine the flour, baking soda, cinnamon, ginger, cloves, salt, and instant coffee in a large bowl with a whisk, then set it aside.

  • Add the brown sugar and softened butter to a large bowl or the bowl of your stand mixer with the paddle attachment and cream until light and fluffy, about 1 to 2 minutes.

  • Stop the mixer when adding the molasses to avoid the thick syrup from splattering on the sides of the bowl. Mix until the molasses is incorporated, then scrape the bottom of the bowl for the stubborn butter.

  • Mix in the egg until it's fully incorporated.

  • Add the dry ingredients and mix until the flour is evenly incorporated. You can briefly mix on low speed in your mixer, or combine by hand with a spatula or wooden spoon.

  • Cover the dough with plastic wrap and refrigerate it for 3 hours or overnight. Chilling the dough allows the flour to fully hydrate and stops them from spreading.

  • Preheat the oven to 350°F and prepare two cookie sheets with parchment paper.

  • Scoop 1.5-ounce balls of dough (about 2 Tablespoons), roll them in the extra granulated sugar, and place them on the cookie sheet, at least 2 inches apart. Gently press the top of the cookie slightly, to keep the cookie from rolling around.

  • Bake the cookies for 12-15 minutes until the edges are slightly browning and the center is puffed and no longer wet looking. The center might “glisten” a bit, but if the cookie appears set, it is done

  • Cool the cookies for 5 minutes before transferring them to a cooling rack. They are very soft due to the sugar so they need a few minutes to set up before being moved.

  • Keep the cookies in an airtight container at room temperature. You can wrap and freeze the cookies for 2 weeks, or freeze the unbaked cookie dough for up to 3 months. Pro-tip: Pre-roll the cookie dough balls and freeze them, making it even quicker to bake them off fresh. Just roll them in the granulated sugar and pop them in the oven.

Nutrition

Serving: 1cookie | Calories: 155kcal | Carbohydrates: 24g | Protein: 2g | Fat: 6g | Saturated Fat: 4g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.3g | Monounsaturated Fat: 2g | Trans Fat: 0.2g | Cholesterol: 23mg | Sodium: 148mg | Potassium: 84mg | Fiber: 0.4g | Sugar: 14g | Vitamin A: 189IU | Vitamin C: 0.004mg | Calcium: 21mg | Iron: 1mg

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Soft and Chewy Molasses Cookies (2024)

FAQs

What is the trick to making soft and chewy cookies? ›

Double Your Yolks Most cookie recipes call for at least one egg. You can try omitting the white of each egg, which tends to dry out when baked, and replacing it with an additional yolk. Plus, egg yolks have more fat than egg whites, which helps to keep your cookies moist and chewy.

What makes cookies soft or chewy? ›

Cornstarch helps product soft and thick cookies. Using more brown sugar than white sugar results in a moister, softer cookie. An extra egg yolk increases chewiness. Rolling the cookie dough balls to be tall and lumpy instead of wide and smooth gives the cookies a bakery-style textured thickness.

Which molasses is best for cookies? ›

Light molasses is the sweetest and mildest out of the bunch because it is made from the first boiling cycle,” she said. “I like to use this type of molasses because it adds moisture to cookies, resulting in a soft and chewy texture.”

Why did my molasses cookies come out flat? ›

If your cookies repeatedly turn out flat, no matter the recipe, chances are your oven is too hot. Here's what's happening. The butter melts super quickly in a too-hot oven before the other ingredients have firmed up into a cookie structure. Therefore, as the butter spreads so does the whole liquidy cookie.

What is the secret ingredient to keep cookies soft? ›

Cornstarch Is The Secret To Soft And Chewy Cookies.

What are three factors that contribute to a chewy cookie? ›

Salted butter, softened – I prefer salted butter but you can also use unsalted and add an extra pinch of salt to the dough. Brown sugar – Just brown sugar because we will get the 'granulated sugar' flavor from the corn syrup. Corn syrup – The corn syrup is what makes these cookies CHEWY FOR DAYS.

What does adding cornstarch to cookies do? ›

1. Cookies. Cornstarch does kind of incredible things to cookies. I mean not only does it give them soft centers, prevents them from spreading, and makes them somewhat thick (in a good way), but it also contributes to the chewiness factor, which, in my opinion, is the most important cookie attribute.

What to add to cookie mix to make them soft? ›

If you like a chewier texture in your cookies, toss in an extra egg yolk to your mix. Adding extra egg yolks works wonders to enhance the moisture content in a cookie, making it super soft and gooey. As a family that loves a soft cookie, this is one of our favorite hacks!

What does adding egg yolk to cookies do? ›

A cookie made with extra egg yolk (or, in this case, only egg yolk), will be lighter and chewier than a cookie made with whole eggs. The cookies will also have a richer flavor thanks to the added fat in egg yolk.

What happens if you add too much molasses to cookies? ›

Doubling up on molasses softened the cookies significantly.

Molasses is also extremely dark in color, so this batch of cookies turned out to be a deep brown.

Why not use blackstrap molasses in cookies? ›

Using Molasses in Baking

It's dark, dense, and comparatively dry, thanks to the lower moisture content of blackstrap. It's also bitter and salty, so there's nothing to temper the heat of the ginger, making it all but inedible.

Is grandma's unsulphured molasses the same as blackstrap? ›

Unsulphured molasses can be light, dark or blackstrap, as long as it hasn't been treated with sulphur dioxide. Most commercially produced molasses is unsulphured.

How do you soften molasses cookies? ›

Simply lay the bread at the bottom of the container and pile your cookies on top of it, seal the lid, and wait a few hours. The cookies will soak up all the moisture from the bread and by the next morning, they will taste as good as the day they came out of the oven gooey.

How do you make cookies fluffy instead of flat? ›

Adjust leavening agents: Baking powder and baking soda are responsible for the rise and structure of cookies. If your cookies are too flat, try slightly increasing these leavening agents. Conversely, if your cookies are overly puffy and then collapse into flatness, it could be due to using too much leavening agent.

What makes molasses cookies crack on top? ›

Molasses cookies have that nice crackly top for a few reasons: the molasses makes them spread and the sugar coating dries out the surface so that when they spread, they crack instead of puff.

What is the trick to soften hard cookies? ›

Another way to soften cookies is by placing the cookies in an airtight container with a damp paper towel. The paper towel will release moisture and help to soften the cookies without making them too soft or mushy. Another way is to place the cookies in a plastic bag with a slice of apple or a damp tea towel.

Why are my cookies fluffy and not chewy? ›

Using the wrong type of flour (or just too much flour).

Using too much flour will make your cookies too cakey, so try reducing the flour amount by two tablespoons. Avoid using cake flour instead; try a mix of all-purpose flour and bread flour for a more dense and chewy texture.

Does baking soda or powder make cookies chewy? ›

Baking soda is generally about three times stronger than baking powder, so adjust your recipe accordingly. Baking soda and baking powder can produce cookies with different textures. Baking soda is typically used for chewy cookies, while baking powder is generally used for light and airy cookies.

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